Budapest advertises to a party village. On Saturday, the party poured into the streets and occupied the Elizabeth Bridge, the river bank and the city of Danube in the hot heat of the summer.
Most young people danced from pests to Buda between 100,000 and 200,000.
It usually takes only 20 minutes to walk up to 3 hours.
Victor Oran’s ban, many Budapest Pride participants spurred me to attend me far away. Last year, only 35,000 people participated.
Many banners mocked Hungary. It was like a peaceful revenge by some of the people who proclaimed the war during the war for the past 15 years.
“In my history class, I learned enough to admit dictatorship. You don’t have to explain it -vik!” Read a banner made by hand. “I’m too boring to fascism,” he said.
There was a T -shirt with a bright eye shadow and a lipstick with an orban image.
The LGBT community with vivid tools constituted the core of March, but this year’s pride has been changed to the celebration of human rights and solidarity.
“We don’t see exactly as we are forbidden!” Gergely Karacsony, the mayor of Budapest, told the crowd in a speech in front of Budapest Technology University.
Today’s march was able to go down to the selection of his political career. The city hall hosted an event that the government attempted to ban it with hunger and constant struggle with the central government and now won.
“In fact, we seem to be performing peaceful and freely fat shows with puff and hate. The message is clear. They have no power!” Karacsony continued.
Among the attendees was the Finnish MEP Li Andersson, he felt that Orban was using it as an excuse to prohibit the march of family values.
“The reason we are here is not only pride, but it is important to emphasize that this is about our basic rights,” she said.
The ban was based on the new laws passed by the majority of Orban’s FIDESZ Party in Congress, and subordered the freedom of assembly to the 2021 Children’s Protection Act, which identifies the freedom of assembly with homosexuality, and prohibits the description or promotion of homosexuality in places where children can see.
The police justified the ban on Saturday March as the basis for children to witness it. As a result, the mayor cited the 2001 law in stating the case hosted by the council.
Eventually, the police officers who attended the march looked sadly looking at their excluded parties, maintaining careful beings.
In other areas of the city, ORBAN attended the graduation ceremony of 162 new police officers and customs officers and the graduation ceremony of the National Secretary of State to policy for aliens.
Orban told the students and their families: “The order must not exist in itself.
Previously, he and other prominent Pides officials posted their photos with their children and grandchildren to reclaim the word “pride.”
Szentkiralyi, the head of the Budespest Council’s faction, said, “To post a picture and show us proud of it,”
The existence of the police was arrested on Saturday Budapest, but a temporary camera was installed before March and was mounted on a police vehicle to record the entire event.
The law on March 18, to prohibit Pride, gave the police a new authority to use facial recognition software. Participants may be fined between £ 14 ($ 19) to £ 430.
The pro -government media were caught in criticism of the case at the time, and the march was reversed by Fidesz politicians that it had nothing to do with the freedom of law and that the march was a celebration of distortion.
“Budapest’s confusion” declared the Hungarian state, the government’s flagship.
“Greta Thunberg, an infamous climate activist and a recent terrorist supporter, has been on the Budapest Pride on the Instagram page.”
ZOLTAN KISZELLY, a political analyst close to the government, told the BBC that “after demonstrations, this will be a question for the court.”
“If the court decides in favor of the mayor and the organizer, Orban can say. We must change the bill again.”
But if the court decides the government, the prime minister can be satisfied with the law he promoted despite the fact that he was proud.